New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 5, 1915, Page 13

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“TIGERS' OFFENSE. REACHES TOPNOTCH onches 0 Doubt Whether De- ! fense Can Hold Crimson Attack Princeton, N. J,, Nov. 5.—Coach Rush probably would have liked to continue hard work on the Princeton @leven yesterday, but the proximity of the Harvard game forced him to lighten the practice. A snappy signal drill occupied an hour of the after- noon, and there was lots of kicking practice. Jim McCormick put the touches on the interference of the backs and Rush put the men through all their formations to perfect the ys. b Just at that point in the practice a cold driving rain came and . the head coach sent the men to the base- ball cage for the remainder of the session. In the shelter the team started to work on their shattered de- fense. As actual scrimmage was impossible the players lined up against the scrubs in dummy scrim- age. Tackling was prohibited, but le scrubs ran through some of the Harvard plays and the regulars worked the defense formations against the plays. This work took up the remainder of the afternoon, Rush excusing the men from strenuous practice. It is thought that two days of rest before the big battle will do more than any- thing else to restore the confidence &@nd the ginger of the forwards. The power of the defense could not be definitely judged from the. tactics of | . the afternoon, but the men appeared | in better spirit and went through the plays with more snap than heretofore. Improving Offense. was filed by President Barrow of the International league. The question | will be taken up at the meecting of the National association in San Francisco next week. As soon as O'Rourke received the notice from Mr. Farrel, he made a de- talled statement concerning the po- sitlon of the Eastern assoclation ter- ritorial rights, and sent the same to Secretary Farrell, who will hold O’Rourke’s proxy at the meeting. “The Eastern association will make a determintd fight against the appli- cation of tie International league,” sald O’'Rourke. The National associa- tion constitution provides that leagues of higher classification may take citles from lower leagues by paying $2,600 for each city and also making satisfactory settlement for other dam- age. But another clause provides this action cannot be taken unless major leagues have taken territory from the International circuit. The majors have not taken any International cities, so I do not see how they will get around that. The Eastern association has paid its protection money for 1916, and our rights are safe guavded.” President O'Rourke may find it a much harder proposition to fight the move of the International league from long distance, than if he were right on the ground, but it was hardly to be expected that he would use His ight as a member of the board of di- rectors of the National association and attend the San Francisco meeting, when the Eastern assoclation did not allow of his expenses being paid. TRIBUNES WIN FROM . | BELL CITY BOWLERS | | Wallace-Barnes Company Outclassed —Results in City and Red | ' Men's Leagues. ! The Tribunes second team was' in their glory last night when they took three straight games from the The offense seems to have reached the high water mark, and will un- dgubtedly -prove a surprise to those Who saw the team in the Dartmouth | game. Rush'has given his men more ! plays and Jim McCormick has drilled them so well that the running at- | tack has improved wonderfully. - The ! regular backfleld worked practically throughout the afternoon and moved like a clock. " Halsey will probably retain his { place at tackle, appearing there at |windish ... { the start of the game on Saturday. |merry ...... He is rapidly regaining his old time !m Kilduff . strength and the coaches seemed sure | \y Wagner day that the giant would be in fine | o Wagner. ... n. Parisette went in at right ckle for a time today, and he will probably be the first choice in case & substitute is needed for Halsey. . jt is still uncertain whether Lam- Perton or Brown will play right end In Saturday. ill not announce their decision un- 1 Saturday afternoom. grm for the clash with the Crim- be the logical favorite in' spite of the fact that Brown has been at the place throughout the year. together | BEasso .. Myers The coaches probably | Fidwards . Larson . But' ' Lam- | Landry, . berton is improving steadily and will {Frior o ....... Wallace-Barnes team of Bristol at the Aetna alleys. M. Wagner of the Tribunes was the star of the night, ‘Wallace-Barnes of Bristol. Walters .... .70 75 72— Yard .... ..'80 T2 64— Smith Beles e 9T 95 95— Panulla .. 16 86 90— ceess 82 97 81— 424 402—1231 217 2186 287 251 260 264 251 238 278 237 455 406—1268 CITY LEAGUE. Elites. 79 98 12 . 88 98 88— . 87 90 103— 92 88 101— 103 106 102— 449 480 Annex. 99 274 280 281 311 516—1445 | sarte as that which took part in the | McConn .... 67 The rest of the lineup will be the | McBriarty .... 94 92— 101— 86— 97— 195 470—1410 90 94 95 116 98 Dartmouth game. Gennert will be at | Huck center, with Nourse and Hogg flank- | poote ing him. McLean will be at his old | Blanchard osition of left tackle. Highley I8 | Hoffman .. re of his place at left end, and in ite of his light weight of 158 pounds .should prove one of the stars of e encounter. He is, with the ex- RED MEN’S LEAGUE. ception of Moore, the fastest man on Scouts. the team and plays an important part 87 in the Tigers' kicking game. 5o Plenty of Tickets. F In the backfield the old combina- tion of Glick at quarterback, Shea and Tibbott at the halves and Driggs Jat fullback will be called upon. The substitutes—Dickerman, Moore, Law Eddy are all in fine condition to | Farnest .... apswer any needs that may arise. It |Berlin ..... may be that Rush will use two back- flelds in the game, retaining Glick at quarterback throughout. #There are still lots of tickets for | Nelson ... P87 NT06 82 the game, and G. R. Murray, the Ath- | Fusari i . 96 107 A ic Treasurer at Princeton, expects | Daigle .. i 69 92— b be able to accommodate many who | Connors .. 91— pme to the game expecting to get | Foberg fa— hei pasteboards at the gates. The fickets are on sale at Spalding’s in '_“‘J York and in Philadelphia, and eflallotment has also been seut to the | ex County Country club and to | Fronsen ¥ S. Harrington, 810 Broad street, | o 0]::: *‘ wark. The Pennsylvania Rail-| " Roberts Jrdad will run special trains Saturday Aim_aham"" morning, using all three of their sta- Ly G tions at Princeton to sidetrack the traime. The faculty of the university has ’grmauy declared Saturday a holiday 104 100 455 4 96— 297 A, Sondstrom .. 99— 276 F. Robertson .. 104 Sandstrom 81— '.]‘;; 252 288 274— ‘Warriors. 292 238 243 261 410 417-—-1289 FRICTION IN YALE ‘ TEAM ERADICATED 412 r the students. The program this fternoon until Saturday night will e a busy one. The interclass re- | tta on Lake Carnegie comes thisj ernoon, with the senior promenade o d,musical club's concert in the eve- | Captain Wilson and Hinkey Reunited ing. Saturday morning the battle hetween the Crimson and the Orange Through New Coaching System. Busy In An Effort to Block DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1915. single where else. Cambridge, Mass.,, Nov. 5.—Coach Haughton intends to use Soucy, the rangy crimson player, at one of the end positions for the balance of the season Earlier in the campaign ex- long enough to remember their sig- nals. While the Yale squad presents a likely lot of candidates from a phy- sical point of view, they have been have shown no football intuition. It is generally admitted that Captain Wilson, although he is a fine player and a good leader, does not fit hap- and his football sense i{s nat the kind to choose dnd ®irectthe ‘plays! d Black begins on the various ath- me and the first football contest | hereabouts are not at all disheartened | bracting a lot of attention and Coach | former EN players has revealed the = mal conditions and, from now on, 1t is PRES. BARROW ASKS tween Head Coach Frank Hinkey and i = T e seems to have been at the bottom of ests in the football situation at heart 1 the Proposition. f‘ coaching policy. While much blame ceived notification vyesttrday from {yale's greatest blunders were made on 1 to the effect that the Interna- | tain. Hinkey, sitting on the side lines, ¥ Hartford to be added to Its ter-| played in some of Yale's games. Hci stic fields. First comes the trap between the scrub teams of the two | over the football situation at New | [Phil Brasher has been working | fact that the recent reversals have expected that there will be no more 4 'FOR TWO FRANCHISES | catain Wilson and some of the other dent O’Rourke Tmmediately Gets | the poor showing of the Yale team. have avoided taking sides in whatever /Bridgeport, No. 5.—President § p54 heen heaped on Hinkey for Yale's pecretary Farrell of the National as- | the fleld when matters had been taken al league has made formal appli- | codld not be blamed for the stupid er- rights.in minor-leagud baseball. | likewise lsn't responsible for players pot, closely followed by the soccer New Haven, Nov. 5.-—Yale alumni iversities. The latter event is at- | Haven. Recent visist to Yale by teadily with his men. brought about a readjustment to nor- friction. That there was friction be- l coaches is freely admitted and this Those who have had the best inter- controversy there has been in Yale's b'Rourke of the Eastern assoclation l'poor work, it is known that many of ogiation of Professional Basebull | into his own hands by the Yale cap- jon for the cities of Springfield| rors of judgment that have been dis- otary Farrel sald the ivll."““on who have not thelr wits about them ! The split between the head coach &nd captain has been kngwn for the last few weeks, but the other coaches interested in Yale's welfare have re- fered by me, it is weli w Any $18 and $20 ‘uits or Over- coat in the store at the slow to grasp the fundamentals and ! pily into the position of quarterback price of Hauéhion Will Keep Soucy At End in All Big Games perts believed Soucy was a fixture at center for the big games, but Hauga- ton believed he would fit in better at ! end. In scveral games in which he has played at his new position he has shown up remarkably well. taking any action, be- lieving that the difficulty would ad- just itself. The harmony between { the coach on the side line and the | captain on the field dirccting the play frained from fairs has had a disorganizing effect on all of the players It was not because the players were not trying to do their best or that the coaches were not doing their best. The ‘whn!c trouble was the lack of co- operation, and in the chaos which r sulted the Yale candidates have ab- sorbed little football. ‘But the breach has now been closed. my history. In conjunction with this I also offer $15.0 Hundreds of different styles at this price—fine worsteds, serges, and mixtures in all the season’s wanted shades. Every suit and overcoat is tailored on the premises, my tailors being in plain view of the street. Come in and look them over, but don’t buy unless you are absolutely certain that they are all 1 claim—the best values in New Britain or any- “Tom” Murray, Open Every Evening Till 9 fore the public by any tailor in America, but in view of the big boom it has giver my business heretofore when of- i what it cost me. I am de- termined to make this the largest November business of Here’s An Opportunity to Maich An Old Coat and Vest You Probably Have Hanging Up in Your Clothes Closet A $5 Pants This is the most costly advertising stunt ever put be- For Suit or Overcoat 394 MAIN STREET NEW BRITAIN, CT. Monday and Saturday Till 10 all fric- from | it is believed. has eliminated Wd the whole crowd, iinkey down, are now pulling to- !:;('lhm‘. A former Yale player who visited the Yale bowl on Wednesday, the first day that Shevlin and, the other coaches were out, brought back the glad tidings to their Yale friends here that the change in both players | and coaches was very evident and that | the Blue football army is preparing | for its big games with Princeton and | Harvard with more spirit than a Yale ! team has shown for years. PERFKCTILY = PASTEU IZED MILK SEIBERT AND SON i’ark Street, Near Stanle G teams. Tel. connection JUDG I AND KIDS WILL BE THERE ’ New Haven, Conn., Nov. 5.—Judge Mathewson today asked Msn.gorl Carrington of the Yale eleven for per- | mission for the boys' club of this city to see the Yale-Brown game on Sat- urday. Manager Carrington wrote out the following order: “Pass the Judge I and 6,000 kids.” This is believed to | | be the biggest pass written since Noah | passed into the ark with his v'om-i | A. B. JOHNSON, D. . DENTISI - Nastivnal Bank Bvilding. EVENINGS. OPEN ranions was entirely lost, and this state of af- | + The reorganization at New Huvon,J GREEN LABEL BEER (BREWERY BOTTLING) This Beer is brewed from specially selected extra pale Northwestern barley-malt, the choicest imported Bohemian hops and the finest brewers’ rice, imported from India. It is guaranteed to be brewed only from the above-mentioned materials, and to be at all times at least four months old. It is of a pale color, and 1s so bottled as to present a very attractive appearance. It possesses an exceptionally delicious and distinctive flavor. YELLOW LABEL BEER This beer, made from the same high-grade materials as “Ha. rd Green Label,” is sold only in cases, and is designed for local or present use rather than for export. It is pale in color, of full body, fine hop flavor and delightful sparkle. It is carefully brewed d well aged and is casily the leader among all | ent-use case beers, as is ‘“‘Harvard Green Label among exports. It is known as “Yellow Label” DIS I RIBUTI M. T. WHITE, Railroad Arcade. BEER and ALE ARE ALWAYS BEST HALF STOCK ALE (SPARKLING PALE) This ale is pale in color, full-mouthed in taste, and hoppy in flavor. racteristics of the It possesses all the best, C rapidly in publie carbonated ales now growing s tavor. It has no sediment in the bottle like stock ale, requires no settling but pours clear and sparkling. Hold a glass of Harvard Ale up to the light. You can then see what a brilliant, luminous ale it is—as bright as a new dollar and as clear as a crystal. This ale is brewed from the finest materials and every precaution is taken to insure fts high quslity and healthfulness. It has the flavor richness and body that are the distinguishing characteristics of a high-grade ale. In addition thereto it has a brilliancy that is distinctively its own. It is a notable achlevement in the art of brewing. Besides being a delicious beverage, we espe- cially recommend Harvard Sparkling Pale Ale on account of its health-giving properties as a body- builder for invalids and conva.escents and for those in active training. G AGENTS FOR HARVARD PRODUCTS Telephone [§]

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